Attorney makes defending religious liberty his mission

"All citizens should be able to have access to all benefits and privileges
of the law. If a woman works in a Catholic University and she is faced with the
dilemma to use or not to use those benefits, i.e contraception, abortion, it
should be her decision according to the dictates of her conscience ..."
Exactly right. When we talk of religious liberty, this often means the ability
of religious hierarchies to throw their considerable weights around, not the
rights of the individual.

oneheartWEST JORDAN, UT

Aug. 11, 2012 12:45 p.m.

I don't think a doctor or a religious leader should be forced into
performing a service that goes against their beliefs whether they be religious
or of personal moral choice.

Baccus0902Leesburg, VA

Aug. 10, 2012 5:19 p.m.

Mr. Hasson is undeniably a man of conviction and I am sure a great human
being.

It seems to me, however, that he is using his right to be
wrong. Suing the Federal Government on behalf of those religion institutions is
a contradiction of his own belief:

"Hasson elaborates that giving
people the freedom to follow the dictates of their conscience and exercise their
faith, as long as it doesn't threaten public health, safety or morals, is
critical for a pluralistic society to peacefully function."

All
citizens should be able to have access to all benefits and privileges of the
law. If a woman works in a Catholic University and she is faced with the dilemma
to use or not to use those benefits, i.e contraception, abortion, it should be
her decision according to the dictates of her conscience as Mr. Hasson claims,
not the decision of her employers who prevent her ability to make "a
mistake" by limiting her health insurance options.